A National Geographic (NG) article ‘Feathers for T. Rex?’
by the Senior Assistant Editor, Christopher Sloan,1
has attracted fierce criticism from some prominent evolutionists for its promotion
of the idea that birds evolved from dinosaurs. The article even illustrated a baby
T. rex with feathers, as well as putting feathers on another theropod dinosaur,
Deinonychus. In a prominent heading, the article proclaimed: ‘We
can now say that birds are theropods just as confidently as we say that humans are
mammals.’2 It was based on a
fossil illegally exported3 from
Liaoning Province, China, tentatively named Archaeoraptor liaoningensis,
allegedly a ‘feathered dinosaur’.

Dinosaur-to-bird theory: Problems!

Readers of Creation magazine should be familiar with the extensive scientific
critiques of the dino-to-bird evolutionary theory, despite the sensationalist claims
in the media—see some of articles hyperlinked in
note 4. Even among evolutionists, some have refused to be swept along by
the hype. For example, Alan Feduccia, a world authority on birds at the University
of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, wrote an encyclopedic book on living and fossil
birds.5 He pointed out much
evidence against the dinosaur-to-bird theory, including the huge differences in
lung and embryonic thumb structure. Also, dinosaurs have exactly the wrong anatomy
for developing flight, with their large tails and hindlimbs and short forelimbs.
And the so-called ‘feathered dinosaurs’ are ‘dated’ by evolutionists
at millions of years later than undoubted birds.

His colleague, University of Kansas paleontologist Larry Martin, commented on the
wishful thinking and bias of another ‘feathered dinosaur’ claim:

‘You have to put this into perspective. To the people who wrote the paper,
the chicken would be a feathered dinosaur.’6

Evolutionist slams National Geographic for bias and ‘tabloid journalism’

But the NG article was the last straw in shameless sensationalism for Storrs Olson,
Curator of Birds at the National Museum of Natural History of the Smithsonian Institution
in Washington, DC. He wrote:

‘The idea of feathered dinosaurs and the theropod origin of birds is being
actively promulgated by a cadre of zealous scientists acting in
concert with certain editors at Nature and National Geographic
who themselves have become outspoken and highly biased proselytizers of the
faith. Truth and careful scientific weighing of evidence have been
among the first casualties in their program, which is now fast becoming one of the
grander scientific hoaxes of our age—the paleontological
equivalent of cold fusion.’7

Among other things, Dr Olsen, an evolutionist, pointed out:

‘None of the structures illustrated in Sloan’s article that are claimed
to be feathers have actually been proven to be feathers. Saying that they are is
little more than wishful thinking that has been presented as fact.’

Since Dr Olsen wrote that scathing critique of NG, even more disturbing news has
surfaced. An eminent paleontologist in Beijing, Xu Xing, now claims that the fossil
is not even genuine. Rather, ‘Archaeoraptor liaoningensis’
was really combined from the body and head of a birdlike creature and the tail of
a different dinosaur. Dr Xu said that a fossil in a private collection in China
contains the mirror image of the tail of the alleged Archaeoraptor.

But it mightn’t be a deliberate fake like ‘Piltdown Man’, a human
skull and an ape’s jaw. Dr Xu said:

‘For science, this is a disaster. When pieces are stolen and smuggled out,
sometimes blocks of fossils are matched together mistakenly. That can be a big mistake,
and it misleads the public.’10

At the time of writing, research is still ongoing, but Czerkas said that Xu may
be right, and National Geographic plans to publish a correction in the
March issue.10

After that, scientists in China claimed to have discovered yet another faked tail—this
one added by a Chinese farmer to a flying pterosaur. Apparently this one has fooled
the editors of Nature, another journal singled out by Dr Olsen (above)
as overzealous to proselytize the dinosaur-to-bird theory.11

History of hoaxes

This wouldn’t be the first time that National Geographic, in its
eagerness to proselytise for the evolutionary faith, has rushed into print with
‘evidence’ that has turned out to be a hoax or an overblown claim that
was later discredited. Many years ago, the magazine had a glossy picture displaying
amazing artistic licence of our supposed ancestor, the ‘missing link’
Zinjanthropus boisei or ‘Nutcracker man’, discovered by Louis
Leakey.12Now no evolutionist
would claim that this robust australopithecine was a human ancestor—see Marvin
Lubenow’s book Bones of Contention.

Some atheistic/evolutionary/sceptical/anti-Christian websites are, amazingly, trying
to downplay the Archaeoraptor fiasco, by pointing out that it was ‘science’
that put it right. Of course, they deceitfully equate ‘science’ and
‘evolution’, although evolutionary wishful thinking was responsible
for the hoax in the first place! And now they tell us
that NG is a popular general interest magazine and not a peer-reviewed scientific
journal—not a peep from them while NG’s shameless evolutionary sensationalizing
remained unexposed! See also Be sceptical of the Skeptics!

What should we think about ‘feathered dino’ claims?

Start with the Bible, the Word of the Creator God who was there, and never lies
or errs. The Bible teaches that birds and other flying creatures were created on
Day 5, while dinosaurs and other land animals, and man, were created on Day 6.

Facts never speak for themselves; rather they are always interpreted within
a framework, or paradigm. Most important are the two opposing frameworks
of Christianity and materialism. And the dino-to-bird scenario has become a dogma
into which the evidence must be twisted.

Don’t believe everything you read in the media. Mostly, the media are biased
towards evolution and against God. We should not be surprised that they splash supposedly
pro-evolution ‘evidence’ on the front pages, but when this ‘evidence’
is refuted, even by other evolutionists, this is either buried in an obscure place,
or not reported at all. This has happened repeatedly—remember the alleged
life from Mars in an Antarctic meteorite, now almost universally discounted? See
the articles hyperlinked in Ref. 13. And it
has happened with many other ‘missing link’ claims, including alleged
‘feathered dinosaurs’. Another example is Pakicetus, based
on a few skull fragments, which was heavily touched up as a ‘missing link’
between land mammals and whales, to indoctrinate schoolteachers. As shown, the NG
article simply takes media sensationalism to a new low. But for a change, the news
media have publicised the Archaeoraptor problems—of course, accusations
of fraud usually sell newspapers far better than quiet discrediting of ‘evidences’
for evolution that informed evolutionists no longer believe.

There is nothing in creationist theory forbidding dinosaurs from having feathers—it
would not make them any more a transitional form than the egg-laying mammals, the
platypus and echidna. But so far the evidence is lacking. And even if they existed,
it would not prove they evolved from scales—feathers are completely different
from scales in just about every respect.4,14

The dino-to-bird claim has huge scientific problems as outlined above.4,5,7 In fact,
Feduccia wrote: ‘All in all, I find the whole dino-bird business a total hoax.’15

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